This is a repost of a topic posted earlier. The title was too obscure, so I have a new title.
Christians seem to get several things mixed together in their thinking:
There are many mistakes made in the conception of eschatology. One of those is to what end the idea of eschatology refers. I suggest that an obvious missed item is that of a final status and destination. That last entry should point to a clear restoration of the the earth and garden of Eden existence of saints. Per chance, a different destination could be planned for the saints that from this simple idea, but it seems illogical to miss some preservation of the earth. The fall appears to require restoration of both the earth and the people.
A book I have been reading clarifies that Christians do not end up in heaven. I might add sort of an interim stay in Paradise with some equivalence to our idea of heaven, but the book is generally right. The other emphasis is on the restoration of the earth which is treated as holistic eschatology,but the case was not made well as to how that fits in.
One aspect missed regarding the New Jerusalem involves the visiting of kings and the light to nations appears. Of course this requires kings and nations to exist. I'm not sure how that fits into various eschatological views, but it tends to say there are nations and kings after the New Jerusalem appears and other people disappeared, and this, per most perspectives, would happen after the judgments of Revelation 20.
A goal in the analysis of Eschatology is to consider how all the pieces fit together. I'm curious what people see of Christian participation in the 5 areas listed above.
Christians seem to get several things mixed together in their thinking:
- Christian status in the current era
- Temporary status from death until a later status transition occurs
- Eschatological status – this may be the same as the temporary status
- Eschatological resurrection
- Maybe a final status and destination
There are many mistakes made in the conception of eschatology. One of those is to what end the idea of eschatology refers. I suggest that an obvious missed item is that of a final status and destination. That last entry should point to a clear restoration of the the earth and garden of Eden existence of saints. Per chance, a different destination could be planned for the saints that from this simple idea, but it seems illogical to miss some preservation of the earth. The fall appears to require restoration of both the earth and the people.
A book I have been reading clarifies that Christians do not end up in heaven. I might add sort of an interim stay in Paradise with some equivalence to our idea of heaven, but the book is generally right. The other emphasis is on the restoration of the earth which is treated as holistic eschatology,but the case was not made well as to how that fits in.
One aspect missed regarding the New Jerusalem involves the visiting of kings and the light to nations appears. Of course this requires kings and nations to exist. I'm not sure how that fits into various eschatological views, but it tends to say there are nations and kings after the New Jerusalem appears and other people disappeared, and this, per most perspectives, would happen after the judgments of Revelation 20.
A goal in the analysis of Eschatology is to consider how all the pieces fit together. I'm curious what people see of Christian participation in the 5 areas listed above.